Sunday, May 22, 2011

Just thought I'd list some places where I've had exceptional service and purchased quality goods relating to my fly fishing adventures. I recommend them all highly. And no, I don't get any free stuff for doing this!

McCloskey's General Store, Boiestown, New Brunswick. Great bacon, the best socks I've ever bought, and the only place in town to buy adult beverages. I wish it was closer than 560 miles from me.

http://www.feathersmc.com/ John McLain's online store. Excellent feathers, and its where I buy my legal seal fur. John is a genuinely nice man.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Last month, I was extremely pleased to find that my Deep Green Beauty featherwing streamer, tied along the lines of a classic New England streamer, is an effective fly. As I noted in an earlier post, Miramichi atlantic salmon really liked it as they were heading back out to sea in early May. Ever the adventurer, at least as far as fly tying goes, I've been wondering if the makings of a new summer/fall hairwing salmon fly are lurking in the colors and materials of the Beauty.

The classic New England lines of the Deep Green Beauty (click on the pics to fill your screen with fly!):

﻿The essential colors of the fly are that lovely deep green, the burgundy of the underwing, and the bright yellow of the body. I've certainly seen the deep green and the bright yellow in Miramichi salmon flies, but the burgundy...not so much. And just as there is a definate format to what I'm calling the New England-style streamer (thank you Carrie Stevens, Herb Welch, et.al.), there is a fairly definate overall format to atlantic salmon hairwing flies, tails and butts and such notwithstanding.

So I've set out to create a new salmon fly... all the while recognizing that there is likely nothing new under the salmon fly sun. Kind of a Don Quixote sort of a situation, but what the heck. Having said all that, here's my first iteration of the fly. It bears no name. Won't get one unless it hooks a few fish. But I already know the name. Not telling. But here's the fly:

Come July, we'll see how she flies. Or swims, I suppose.

ADDENDUM: Today I dyed up some legal polar bear in the same dye batch that I used for the streamer's saddle feathers and used that for the wing in place of the squirrel tail. I like it better. Head still needs one more coat of Cellire:

Saturday, May 7, 2011

For the last couple years, I've been pleased to be the auctioneer for the Miramichi Salmon Association's spring fundraiser, The Icebreaker, held at the Woodmen's Museum in Boiestown, New Brunswick. I have a grand time doing it, and it gets me up on the river for a few days with my good friend Vin Swayze. Vin has been guiding and outfitting on the river for longer than I've been alive...let's just say he knows a thing or two about salmon fishing and the moods of the Miramichi.

Spring fishing on the river (April 15 - if the ice is out - to May 15) often means fishing from a boat. The water can be many feet above summer levels, and wading can be next to impossible. Vin has a great boat for spring fishing and general transport on the river. Its a semi-V with a 20 horse jet drive; he can go where prop boats can't. The boat has an interesting name, which I can say with some pride I had a hand in producing. Vin was asking me about windshields for it several years ago, but was just talking about one for the driver's side of the boat, leaving the passenger (that would be folks like me) to brave the weather. I kiddingly said to him , "Oh, sure, f#@k the guest!" And that became the boat's name. In polite company, the boat is just referred to as FTG. And most importantly and for the record, FTG is something Vin would never do.

Vin getting ready to head out in FTG:

Tuckaway Cabins, where I stay, was started by Vin's father. Vin has retired from active outfitting, and the day to day operations have been assumed by the Bullock family operating as Bullock's Lodge (http://bullockslodge.com/index.html). The camps make perfect salmon fishing "homes away from home":

I hit the river at a perfect time this year. Water levels were up so we could motor to any spot we wanted, and the river was cold, keeping the fish around the Boiestown area during my trip rather than heading down to the sea to rejuvenate after a winter under the river ice. Trees were beginning to bud out in Vermont when I left; not so in New Brunswick:

Fishing is by casting, long lining or trolling. There's quite a tussle going on at the moment about whether trolling should be allowed on the river at this time or not. Let me just say that if a gale is blowing, casting a sinking or sinktip line into it can be downright dangerous, if not impossible, so I say "troll on" in that instance. The equipment I used this trip consisted of a 9wt Loomis NativeRun rod, a Battenkill Large Arbor V reel and a Teeny 400gr. sinktip line. I tie my own leaders; a 9 footer tapered to a 10 pound tippet (constructed of Maxima "brown" material) allowed me to put real pressure on fish to get them landed quickly for a safe release.

Flies for spring salmon fishing on the Miramichi are pretty healthy in size. I was casting streamers like the Mickey Finn and Gray Ghost tied on #1 Daiichi 2271 hooks.

We were doing pretty well on those flies, but things really started to get interesting when I switched to what I'll call a Deep Green Beauty:

The Deep Green Beauty is tied like any of the other flies in the Ghost/Beauty series created by Carrie Stevens, but instead of peacock herl in the underwing, I've used Claret polar bear. And instead of white bucktail as the throat, I've used UV Minnow Belly material. The wing is a deep forest green, no hint of olive at all. It is a very rich looking fly! And it works:

I retired the fly after landing 7 fish on it, including the big 36 incher above. That beautiful big boy jumped 15 times, and considering it spent about 35 minutes in his jaw, the fly doesn't look too much the worse for wear:

I lost the only other copy of that fly I had on the last hit of my trip. The most vicious strike I've ever encountered separated me from it at the tippet. The fly was out about 100 feet from the boat, and we got splashed by the big fish's tail! No, really, we did!

Earlier in the trip, we were working the shoreline near Wendy and Shane Clowater's rental Moonshadow Cottage (http://www.moonshadowcottage.ca/) when Shane came out on his riverside porch with a coffee. He suggested we needed to move upriver about 100 yards - I mean meters. We did so and within 30 seconds I had a grilse on. Talk about knowing your river! Thank you, Shane!

It was a delightful trip. The weather and the river were perfect for Spring fishing on the Miramichi, and it was great to be with my growing group of friends on the river. I can't wait to go back.

About Me

I spent 10 years working for the National Wild Turkey Federation, first as a Regional Director, and finally as their first Director of Development. I then became Executive Director of the American Museum of Fly Fishing, a position I held for almost 7 years - making me the longest serving director of that institution in its history (trust me, that's an accomplishment!). I left the nonprofit world to become, happily, a self-employed carpenter/cabinet maker.
And the Miramichi has become like a second home to me in recent years...a beautiful river, atlantic salmon, and great friends. Life is good.
Photo courtesy Renate Bullock